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Coastal and Marine Technical Team Conference Call 6/12/14 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Agenda 1.Introductions, review call agenda and goals 2.Review of Projects.

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Presentation on theme: "Coastal and Marine Technical Team Conference Call 6/12/14 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Agenda 1.Introductions, review call agenda and goals 2.Review of Projects."— Presentation transcript:

1 Coastal and Marine Technical Team Conference Call 6/12/14 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Agenda 1.Introductions, review call agenda and goals 2.Review of Projects 3.Discussion of Funded Hurricane Sandy Projects and Competitive Grants 4.Discussion of Any Next Phases Needed 5.Discussion of Additional Priority Needs 6.Recommendations for Full Technical Team 7.Next Steps for Team

2 Coastal and Marine Technical Team Team Members Susan Adamowicz, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Karel Allard, Environment Canada Amanda Babson, National Park Service John Coluccy, Ducks Unlimited Darlene Finch, NOAA Hector Galbraith, National Wildlife Federation Mitch Hartley, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Kevin Kalasz, Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife Dawn McReynolds, New York State DEC Ellen Mecray, NOAA Andrew Milliken, North Atlantic LCC Rob Thieler. USGS Adam Whelchel, TNC John Catena, NOAA?

3 Foundational Mapping: Coastal Update to National Wetlands Inventory North Atlantic LCC Role Sponsoring update to NWI for coastal areas ProductsUpdated wetland mapping in 162 coastal areas in 7 states Available NowProject is complete (Sept. 2013); incorporated into Northeast Terrestrial Habitat map by Umass; Results fully integrated into the National Wetlands Inventory Next StepsNone anticipated

4 Foundational Mapping: Coastal and Marine Ecological Classification North Atlantic LCC Role Sponsoring project by TNC, Mass. DFG, and U. of RI ProductsReport and maps testing the classification at 3 spatial scales Available NowDraft final maps and report Available within 3-6 months Peer-reviewed final report Longer Term/next steps Future phases could include crosswalks and mapping of North Atlantic with NROC and MARCO depending on user needs

5 Foundational Mapping: Coastal and Marine Ecological Classification Recommendations Communication between environmental managers and crosswalkers/mappers about goals – what habitat information is essential to convey? Discussion within the community about what map products and formats are most useful for particular goals Careful consideration of the quality, resolution, and general limitations of existing datasets prior to attempting to crosswalk to CMECS.

6 Foundational Mapping: Northeast Aquatic Classification North Atlantic LCC RoleNEAFWA Project; support TNC revisions to streams (tidal component) and lakes ProductsClassification of Northeast streams and lakes Available NowStream classification including new tidal component + guide Available within 3-6 months Enhanced lake classification including lake depth Longer Term

7 Vulnerability Assessments: Species Vulnerability to Climate Change North Atlantic LCC RoleSupporting assessment by NatureServe using Climate Change Vulnerability Index (CCVI) ProductsReport on vulnerability of 64 high regional concern, representative, and foundational species includes tidal marsh and beach species Available NowFinal report Available within 3-6 months Longer Term/next stepsNone anticipated

8 Vulnerability Assessments: Habitat Vulnerability to Climate Change North Atlantic LCC Role Completing NEAFWA- sponsored project by Manomet/NWF Products3 reports: terrestrial/wetland; cold water; and coastal habitats Available NowReports completed; northeast climate database (neclimateus.org) Available within 3-6 months Final reports Longer Term/next steps Not anticipated; regional adaptation plan?

9 Vulnerability Assessment Reports Complete Recommendations Monitor salt marsh accretion rates to determine whether accretion remains stable or is being overtaken by sea level rise. Develop new habitat change models Refine assumptions about SLR Study human responses to SLR Understand the relationship between shifting coastlines, land ownership and future conservation Study populations and metapopulations from a region-wide context Incorporate climate change impacts elsewhere

10 Conservation Design: Designing Sustainable Landscapes North Atlantic LCC Role Sponsoring project led by UMass Amherst ProductsExtensive spatial datasets, current and future species capability and ecological integrity, decision support tool for landscape design (June 2014) Available NowMany spatial datasets for entire Northeast, including initial species Available within 3-6 months Additional regional spatial data Regional models for 30 rep. species Pilot design effort in CT River watershed Incorporation of SLR (from USGS) Longer TermPotential future phase could extend and enhance conservation design work including coastal component (built into Hurricane Sandy Marsh resiliency project)

11 Conservation Design: Designing Sustainable Landscapes Next steps supported through H.S. project Incorporate SLR response from USGS Incorporate high/low marsh mapping Refine ecological integrity for salt marshes –Including tidal restriction stressor metric and salt marsh ditching stressor metric Complete species habitat capability models for beach and marsh species

12 Conservation Design: Aquatic and Coastal Decision Support Tool North Atlantic LCC RoleSponsoring project with Atlantic Coastal Fish Habitat Partnership, led by Downstream Strategies ProductsAquatic and coastal species models and decision support tools Available Now Available within 3-6 months Pilot models for winter flounder and for brook trout in the Chesapeake Bay watershed; river herring Longer TermMulti-species decision support tools for restoration and conservation (2015)

13 Conservation Design: Piping Plovers and Sea-level Rise North Atlantic LCC Role Sponsoring project by Virginia Tech ProductsAssessment of threats to Piping Plover from SLR and recommendations for habitat conservation Available NowPublished model linking coastal processes and beach habitat Available within 3-6 months Final report and tools including projected impacts of sea level rise and management Longer Term/next steps Expand model across North Atlantic through Hurricane Sandy Beach Resiliency Project

14 Conservation Design: Decision Support Tools for Sea-level Rise Impacts North Atlantic LCC Role NE Climate Science Center project to USGS; LCC facilitated model development through structured decision making ProductsGeospatial data on SLR inundation and dynamic response, decision support models Available NowGeospatial data on SLR inundation and dynamic response Available within 3-6 months Initial regional decision model; incorporated into Designing Sustainable Landscapes Longer TermReports, tools, and recommendations; next steps through Hurricane Sandy projects

15 Conservation Design: Marine Bird Mapping and Risk Assessment North Atlantic LCC Role Sponsoring a project by NC State U., NOAA, BRI, CSI/CUNY ProductsMapping of seasonal seabird abundance to inform marine planning Available NowInitial set of marine bird species maps Available within 3-6 months Final report and maps (June 2014) Longer Term

16 Demonstration Project: Integrating Science into Policy: Local Adaptation for Marsh Migration North Atlantic LCC Role Supporting Demonstration Project by Maine Inland Fisheries and Wildlife ProductsIdentification of the most resilient marshes in Maine; incorporation of results in Beginning with Habitat Available Now Available within 3- 6 months Results of meetings with coastal towns in Maine Longer TermFacilitating local actions to assist marsh migration

17 Conservation Design: Increasing Resiliency of Beach Habitats and Species in the Face of Storms & Sea Level Rise North Atlantic LCC Role Coordinating overall project among P.I.s, LCC and CSC partners and with P.I.s USGS, FWS, Virginia Tech, Rutgers, TCI ProductsRegional decision support models for coastal beach management and restoration for beach habitats and species in the face of storms and SLR; evaluation of the effectiveness of beach restoration and management Available Now Available within 3- 6 months Pre-hurricane survey results of inlets and beaches Longer TermComplete models and results delivered to partners (2016)

18 Increasing Resiliency of Beach Habitats and Species in the Face of Storms & Sea Level Rise Expand SLR response/plover model to Region –USGS, Virginia Tech Collect beach-nesting bird location and habitat data on NWRS and NPs –USFWS, NPS, USGS (iPlover) Inventory of beach and inlet modifications before and after H.S. –Terwilliger Consulting Assess effects of beach stabilization projects in NY& NJ on beach habitats and species –Virginia Tech, Rutgers, Conserve Wildlife NJ Deliver results to partners –Rutgers, TBD

19 Conservation Design: Increasing Resiliency of Tidal Marsh Habitats and Species in the Face of Storms & Sea Level Rise North Atlantic LCC Role Coordinating overall project among P.I.s, LCC and CSC partners and P.I.s FWS, USGS, SHARP, UMass ProductsRegional decision support models for tidal marsh restoration and management for marsh habitats and species in the face of storms and SLR; evaluation of the effectiveness of different marsh restoration approaches for increasing resiliency Available Now Available within 3-6 months Consistent monitoring metrics; initial assessments of tidal marsh integrity Longer TermComplete models and results delivered to partners (2016)

20 Increasing Resiliency of Tidal Marsh Habitats Habitats and Species in the Face of Storms & SLR Develop/refine models for understanding future impacts of sea level rise and storms on tidal marshes and marsh species –Geological/physical response TBD (USGS) –Marsh community response TBD (USGS, USC, VIMS) –Wildlife response TBD (SHARP) Decision support models and incorporation into decision model framework –UMass High/low marsh mapping –UMe Monitoring and assessment of effectiveness of restoration for marsh resiliency –USFWS, NPS, SHARP (Ume, UConn, Udel, SUNY) Delivery of results to partners –TBD (NROC, MARCO)

21 Next Phases or Additional Needs Incorporate SLR and coastal elements into Designing Sustainable Landscapes (funded) Designing Sustainable Landscapes next phase –Conservation Design Decision-Support Tool –Habitat management and restoration –Timber harvest Climate change impacts of flow, temperature and brook trout –Coordination of monitoring, databases and models Other coastal/marine immediate needs


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